Behind the Lens: Dispatches from the Cinematographic Trenches
Book
Filmmaker Jay Holben has been battling in the production trenches for most of his life. For the past...
Awix (3310 KP) rated The Avengers in TV
Mar 4, 2018 (Updated Mar 4, 2018)
Many of the early episodes are quite hard work now, but the two seasons where Macnee is paired with Diana Rigg are classic TV, and the sometimes-maligned final season with Linda Thorson also contains many neglected gems (the episode with the murderous clowns, for instance). Even when the show is not quite firing on all cylinders, there is always Patrick Macnee's inimitable performance as Steed to enjoy.
Kristin (149 KP) rated The Profiler: My Life Hunting Serial Killers and Psychopaths in Books
Dec 7, 2018
James Acaster's Classic Scrapes
Book
James Acaster has been nominated for the Edinburgh Comedy Award five times and has appeared on...
The Everything Easy Large-Print Word Search Book: More Than 100 New Easy-to-Read Puzzles: Volume 7
Book
Easy to read, easy to solve! The Everything Easy Large-Print Word Search Book, Volume 7, the newest...
The Ultimate Box Set Guide: The 100 Best Series Rated and Reviewed
Book
Previously, it was all about cinema. Yet the twenty-first century has increasingly seen fans and...
The Little Book of Superman
Book
The Man of Tomorrow: The shining hope of the DC Universe Since first appearing inAction ComicsNo. 1...
Breathe, Mama, Breathe: 5-Minute Mindfulness for Busy Moms
Book
Mothers can feel as if they are sprinting through life, crashing onto the pillow at day's end only...
David McK (3425 KP) rated The Truman Show (1998) in Movies
Sep 6, 2019 (Updated Mar 14, 2021)
Peter Weir's incredibly prescient satire drama (released, as it was, even pre Big Brother), in which Jim Carrey shows he can actually act, by putting in - for me - what is probably his best performance as Truman Burbank, the unwitting and unknowing star of a 24/7 reality TV show that is now in its 30th year and that is viewed by millions around the globe.
In effect, a bit of an update on the old Descartes 'how do we know what is real?' question: as far as Truman is concerned, this *is* reality, until a series of accidents and events leads him to start to question everything and everyone in his life, leading to the emotional finale (does he ever meet the girl again? What comes next for the world's most recognizable man?).